Hungarian

Translation

The work of our professional translators is based on their excellent knowledge, experience, professional specialisation, and speed.  The basis of our work is:

  • Speed – possibility of express translations, translations made overnight, or over the weekend;
  • Professionality – high quality translations, standard, professional, or proofreading;
  • Flexibility – work with many data formats;
  • Reasonable prices – including discounts for large-volume orders and long-term cooperation;
  • Special services – e.g. graphic processing of materials.

Translation we do

We will prepare high quality translations exactly according to your requirements:

  • Standard translations which include contracts, business letters, or fiction books, but also economic and legal documents;
  • Professional translations from Hungarian (history, psychology, chemistry etc.), for which a special terminology or other materials and information must be  searched for;
  • Certified translations
  • Express translations over 5 standard pages processed within 24 hours, overnight, or over the weekend;
  • Proofreading 
  • Hungarian - Czech 400,-kč per NP

    The price is per unit Normopage

  • Hungarian - English 480,-kč per NP

    The price is per unit Normopage

  • Hungarian - other languages on request

    The price is per unit Normopage

Standard page: The standardized range is determined by legislation, given by Section 3 (2) of Decree No. 507/2020, whereby the standardized length of text is 1800 characters including spaces.

Call us: +420 602 276 400 -100, 420 296 348 348

Order our convenient package of services:

  • court-certified translations from/to the Hungarian language
  • representative visual aspects of the documents
  • black & white / color printing
  • professional consultation
  • clause of legal force with filing number on the back of the translations (for easy retrieval in state files in case of loss).

Find us in our office

Be it morning or evening, Monday or Saturday, February or August – please contact us at any time with a request to do a translation for you.

We are at your disposal in our office:

JSV International Assistant Service s.r.o.
Chronos Business Centre, 4rd floor

Wenceslas square 808/66
Prague 1, 110 00
Czech republic

About the language

Hungarian – or magyar – is the official language of Hungary and a regional language in Romania, Slovakia, Serbia and Slovenia. It is part of the Uralic language family, along with Finnish and Estonian. It is not mutually understandable with these languages but they do share some features, such as not distinguishing between a male and female pronoun – both ‘he’ and ‘she’ are conveyed by the word ‘ő’. Its vocabulary has been somewhat influenced by the neighbouring Slavic and Germanic languages, as well as by Turkish and Persian.

Dictionary

Szia! “Hello.”

Jó reggelt! “Good morning.”

Jó napot! “Good afternoon.”

 Jó éjszakát! “Good night.”

Mi a neved? “What’s your name?”

Én (name) vagyok. “I’m [name].”

Örvendek. “Nice to meet you.”

Hogy vagy? “How are you?”

Köszönöm jól. És te? “I’m fine, thanks. And you?”

Kérem. “Please.”

Hungarian 

is a Uralic language spoken in Hungary and parts of several neighbouring countries that used to belong to it. It is the official language of Hungary and one of the 24 official languages of the European Union. Outside Hungary, it is also spoken by Hungarian communities in southern Slovakia, western Ukraine (Subcarpathia), central and western Romania (Transylvania), northern Serbia (Vojvodina), northern Croatia, northeastern Slovenia (Prekmurje), and eastern Austria.

It is also spoken by Hungarian diaspora communities worldwide, especially in North America (particularly the United States and Canada) and Israel. With 17 million speakers, it is the Uralic family’s largest member by number of speakers.

Fun facts of language

  • Hungarian has two words for red: piros – used for inanimate things – and vörös – for animate things.
  • When introducing yourself in Hungary, your surname comes first, then your first name – similar to Chinese and Korean.
  • The Hungarian phrase ‘miért itatod az egereket?’ – why are you crying? – literally translates as ‘why are you giving drinks to the mice?’